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Researchers at Arizona State University using NASA's Hubble Space
Telescope believe they are seeing the conclusion of the cosmic
epoch where the young galaxies started to shine in significant numbers.
This marks a time when the so-called "Dark Ages" of the universe was
completed, about 13 billion years ago. (Based on an estimate of
14 billion years for the current age of the universe.)

The arrows in this Hubble image indicate three of the thirty objects
that the team discovered using Hubble's new Advanced Camera for Surveys
(ACS). Astronomers believe that these numerous objects are faint young
star-forming galaxies seen when the universe was seven times smaller
than it is today (at redshifts of about 6) and less than a billion years
old. This is right around the cosmic epoch where astronomers believe
that radiation from hot stars in numerous young galaxies was converting
the universe's cool hydrogen into a hot ionized gas.

The distances to the suspected young galaxies are believed to be so
large given how red the observed objects are. This is interpreted as
being caused by the enormous expansion of the universe since that early
epoch. Almost all of the ultraviolet light from the young stars has
been stretched (or redshifted) to far-red wavelengths. As a consequence,
these three objects are only visible in the reddest of the two filters
aboard the ACS.

The entire ACS field of view shows about thirty such faint red objects.
This means nearly 8,000 such objects would fill a patch of sky no bigger
than what is covered by holding your thumb at arm's length, the Arizona
researchers estimate. They conclude that at least 400 million such
objects filled in the entire universe at this cosmic epoch to the limit
of this Hubble image. And, this is likely only the tip of the iceberg.
NASA's planned 7-meter James Webb Space Telescope will see the entire
population of these proto-galactic objects.